National Post

Keystone XL opponents seek halt to land seizure

- By Andrew Harri s Bloomberg News

CHICAGO • Nebraska landowners opposed to TransCanad­a Corp.’s plan to run the Keystone XL oil pipeline through the state asked two judges to block the Canadian company from seizing property.

The requests, made Wednesday at state courthouse­s in the Nebraska cities of O’Neill and York, followed by a day a U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency report that produc- tion of crude to be transporte­d from Canada’s oilsands will significan­tly increase greenhouse gases tied to global warming. U.S. President Barack Obama, citing environmen­tal concerns and litigation, has yet to decide whether to approve the pipeline, which crosses an internatio­nal boundary.

About 90 Nebraska property owners have now joined in two lawsuits to block TransCanad­a’s bid to acquire easements across privately owned land through which the proposed pipeline will pass. It will extend to a junction in the southeast corner of the state, from where oil will be shunted to the U.S. Gulf Coast.

The filing follows the state Supreme Court’s Jan. 9 ruling that landowners couldn’t challenge a state law allowing TransCanad­a to seize land because it was unclear that their property was in the pipeline’s route.

Four of seven judges ruled in favour the landowners, one vote shy of what they needed to prevail under Nebraska’s constituti­on.

In the latest request to block TransCanad­a, the landowners argue that they’ll prevail in a renewed bid to strike down the law because they now know for certain that they’re in the path.

“There is a substantia­l likelihood” the landowners “will prevail,” their lawyers, David Domina and Brian Jorde, said in court papers.

The company has acquired almost 90% of the land it needs in Nebraska and all the property rights sought in Montana and South Dakota, Shawn Howard, a spokesman for Calgary-based TransCanad­a, said.

“We have received the paperwork that has been filed and we are currently reviewing it,” he said in an email about the new court filings.

Arguments will be heard in court later this month.

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